Originally this company manufactured buttons.
In 1918, after the first world war, they switched to making lighters from
spent ammunition shells.

"IMCO®, the World's Supreme Lighter since 1918!"

IMCO Safety 4200
produced in 1935

The G-11, 1956

Windproof IMCO® Lighters model Triplex Super

In its present form, the Triplex Super 6700 with 10-year warranty
has been on the market since the fifties.

Triplex Super model "petrol Lighters" use liquid fuel (Naphta)
to create a no-fail windproof flame.
Handy swing-open ignition. Once used, the small "tank" with burning
wick can be removed and refilled.

Cardboard printed wood grain box. Box measures 3 3/4"
by 1 1/8" by 1 3/4".
Overall color of box is a light brown with red lettering on both top and
bottom.
Top reads: "Fox Hole Lighter Reg. U.S. Patent No. 407,068 Made
By Imco".
On one end of the slide-through box is printed in red,
"The Imco Co. 45 West 16th Street New York, N.Y."
Other end is printed "For Best Results, Use Only Imco Reserve Wick-Spark
Flints."
Body of the lighter is 2 1/2"
long and 3/4" wide.
Lighter comes with two extra unused
white rope wicks, spare flint spring, and extra
flints
in a small glass vial with cork stopper.
One side of the lighter reads: Imco's Made In U.S.A.

.

Sterling Silver - Made in Canada

Wind-King Lighter

Early 1940's
'Chromium Foxhole lighter'Made by Myron Gray, New York, N.Y.
Box includes lighter, two extra wicks and 15 flints.

DIRECTIONS : The WIND-KING lighter needs no fuel-
it is the wick that burns! All you have to do is to char the top of
a new wick once by applying a match to it.
After that, all that is necessary is to raise the wick within
range of the spark wheel-about 1/4 of an inch-and turn
the spark wheel. Presto! It ignites. To extinguish, pull the
wick down thus cutting off the air, and the wick ceases to burn.